Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of The Doors Available Now
A customer wrote the following to us not long ago:
Recently I fired up my CD circuit, which does not happen very often.
Once the system was warmed up I played some MoFi gold CDs.
Nothing special, but I did like the Yes Fragile CD. Actually enjoyed it.
Guns and Roses Appetite was nasty…
Supertramp Breakfast was nasty…
Enough of that. Then I read your blog on the Doors LA Woman DCC gold CD. Found I have it!
Played the whole thing and I wanted more of it. That is the only CD I have ever heard that had Hot Stamper sound quality.
Dear Sir,
Steve did a great job on L.A. Woman, let me be the first to say. Of course the real thing on vinyl is even better, but it’s a great way to test how good your front end is, assuming you have a killer copy of the vinyl, something that is very unlikely to be the case but something that cannot be ruled out entirely. (Tell me your stamper numbers and I will tell you if you are close.)
I worked through a lot of changes to my system in the 90s and 2000s partly because I had CDs that sounded better in some ways than my vinyl versions of them.
That never happens now, but it took me 20 years to get there!
For example, in the early 2000s this title did not sound as good as the CD until I got rid of all my tube equipment and discovered the life-changing sound of the EAR 324P, the Dynavector 17d and a lot more. The transient attack of the drums and cymbals went from “well recorded — it’s a direct to disc, what did you expect?” to suddenly sounding like real drums you might hear if you were sitting right in front of the kit in a small club.
(I recently took a trip to Nashville and had a chance to see and hear more than a dozen drum kits on the main boulevard. There seemed to be one in every club, facing inwards with the glass of the window removed to give the passers by a taste of what was in store for them inside. Standing three feet from a guy banging a drum kit is something that can teach you a lot about sound, mostly by showing you the enormous gulf that separates live sound from recorded sound in the most audiophile systems.)
That CD of The Three showed me what I had been missing — the presence, dynamics, and most importantly speed and complete freedom from smear of any kind on any instrument. It changed many of my ideas about audio in the most fundamental ways imaginable. Nothing in my audio world was the same after that.
Of the many audio breakthroughs I’ve undergone in the fifty years I’ve been pursuing audio , I might be inclined to put this one right at the top of the list.
(more…)